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Climate change and human rights

We recognize that climate change is a shared global problem with significant impacts on the economy, development, and security. Canada’s international assistance seeks to help countries mitigate and adapt to climate change.

We recognize the importance of understanding the links between climate change and human rights. This includes looking for solutions to the many impacts of climate change that are:

sustainable

equitable

feasible

Impacts of climate change

Canada understands the impacts of climate change can have destabilizing effects on societies. For instance more frequent drought-induced food insecurity will have an effect on the protection of human rights.

Climate change can worsen existing situations of poverty and fragility and create new vulnerabilities for:

women

children

Indigenous groups

persons with disabilities

Climate change must be addressed to achieve sustainable development.

Climate change and migration

Through its effect on the environment climate change can also be a contributing factor to increased migration. This is due to the rising frequency, severity, and slow onset of environmental changes.

The effect of climate change on human rights

Climate change-associated drought, flooding and severe weather could create adverse effects on the right to an adequate standard of living. There are impacts to health as a result of decreasing:

access to safe drinking water

basic sanitation

access to food

Climate change may also have negative effects across the spectrum of recognized international human rights norms. It creates competition and conflict over basic resources, leading to scarcity-driven human migration.

The Paris Agreement

On December 12, 2015, Canada and 194 other countries adopted the Paris Agreement under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. This is an ambitious and balanced agreement to fight against climate change.

It aims to strengthen efforts to limit the global average temperature rise to well below 2℃ and pursue efforts to limit the increase to 1.5℃.

Canada advocated that language on human rights, and specifically the rights of Indigenous people, be included in the Paris Agreement.